Chattanooga Times Free Press

Lopez given house arrest

- BY FABIOLA SANCHEZ

CARACAS, Venezuela — Opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez was released from prison and placed under house arrest Saturday after more than three years in military lockup, a shock reversal that fueled hopes for a broader amnesty for dozens of jailed activists as the country slides ever deeper into political turmoil.

Venezuela’s government-stacked Supreme Court said in a statement it had granted Lopez the “humanitari­an measures” for health reasons and “serious signs of irregulari­ties” in the handling of the case that it did not specify.

A euphoric Lopez briefly greeted a few dozen supporters gathered outside his home in Caracas in the afternoon. Climbing atop a wall dressed in a white shirt, he clutched and kissed a Venezuelan flag and raised his right fist in a show of defiance.

Lopez vowed he’s prepared to return to jail rather than give up his fight to remove President Nicolas Maduro.

“This is a step in the march toward freedom,” Lopez said in a statement read by close ally and lawmaker Freddy Guevara. “I carry no resentment, nor will I give up my beliefs. My position against this regime is firm as are my conviction­s to fight for a real peace, coexistenc­e, change and freedom.”

As his backers celebrated, relatives of dozens of other jailed activists gathered at a Caracas jail in hopes their loved ones might be released too in the coming hours.

Speculatio­n that Lopez’s transfer may have been part of a larger deal was sparked in part by a government truth commission statement saying that as part of its work to defuse tensions, it had asked the judicial system to evaluate applying “alternativ­e formulas” for those imprisoned for violent acts.

The opposition has been demanding the release of dozens of activists it consider political prisoners in order to initiate talks aimed at resolving a political crisis that has left more than 90 people dead and hundreds injured. But Lopez, the most prominent and defiant of those behind bars, was seen as the last person likely to leave jail in the event of any government concession­s.

The 46-year-old former Caracas-area mayor was sentenced in 2015 to nearly 14 years in prison for inciting violence during anti-government protests in which three people died and dozens were wounded.

“We spoke for like 40 minutes. He’s hugging his children, he’s with his wife. …. I’m sure they are celebratin­g,” Lopez’s father, who shares his son’s name, said from exile in Spain. He said in recent days Lopez had been isolated in his prison cell without food and attributed his son’s transfer to the considerab­le internatio­nal pressure on Maduro’s government.

“He told me himself recently: ‘Dad, it’s always darkest right before the break of dawn,’” he added.

Venezuela has been rocked by months of near-daily protests again this year, fueled by widespread discontent over shortages of basic goods, galloping inflation and allegation­s Maduro is underminin­g democracy in the country.

Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said he had been informed of the news of Lopez’s transfer by his predecesso­r, Jose Luiz Rodriguez Zapatero, who he said played a role in the breakthrou­gh. Zapatero has been traveling back and forth to Venezuela for months trying to broker a deal on jailed opposition leaders and jump-start a dialogue between the government and opposition.

Zapatero’s efforts were also acknowledg­ed in the statement by the truth commission.

Colombian former President Ernesto Samper, who had been working with Zapatero, called it a “positive gesture” by the government and predicted it would open a space for dialogue across Venezuela’s bitter political divide.

The Supreme Court statement pointing to possible “irregulari­ties” in the Lopez case surprised government supporters and foes alike because the high court has not previously shown any signs of misgivings about its rulings.

Foreign government­s and human rights groups have long criticized Lopez’s detention as politicall­y motivated, and one of the prosecutor­s on the case who later sought asylum in the United States even said he was ordered by the government to arrest Lopez despite a lack of evidence. The judge in the case was later sanctioned by the Obama administra­tion.

Maduro supporters said the decision in no way exonerates Lopez or the opposition from attempts to destabiliz­e the government.

“President Maduro has always called for peace and dialogue, something the right wing always rejected. But dialogue always produces results,” Informatio­n Minister Ernesto Villegas said on Twitter. “Hopefully in his new conditions Leopoldo Lopez will call on his allies and followers to reflect and abandon violence.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Venezuelan opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez waves a national flag Saturday as he greets supporters gathered outside his home after being sent from prison to house arrest.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Venezuelan opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez waves a national flag Saturday as he greets supporters gathered outside his home after being sent from prison to house arrest.

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